Audio By Carbonatix
A man who took four hostages at a synagogue in a suburb of Dallas, Texas, has been identified by the FBI as British citizen Malik Faisal Akram, 44.
The man who interrupted a morning service in Colleyville on Saturday died after a standoff with police.
Police deployed special weapons teams, while FBI negotiators spent hours talking to the assailant.
Explosions and gunfire could be heard before the 10-hour stand-off ended. The hostages were freed unharmed.
In a statement, the UK Foreign Office said it was aware of the death of a British man in Texas and was in contact with the local authorities.
The four people taken hostage included the synagogue's rabbi, according to US media reports.
The service was being streamed online when the incident began. One of the hostages was released unharmed six hours later, with the other three being led to safety by police several hours after that.
President Joe Biden was briefed about the developing situation.
The incident began at around 11:00 local time (16:00 GMT) when police were called to the Congregation Beth Israel synagogue. People were evacuated from the area shortly after.
A live stream of the Shabbat morning service on Facebook captured audio of a man talking loudly. He could be heard saying: "You get my sister on the phone" and "I am gonna die."
He was also heard saying: "There's something wrong with America." The feed has since been taken down.
The hostage-taker was heard demanding the release of Aafia Siddiqui, a Pakistani neuroscientist who is currently serving an 86-year prison term in the US, law enforcement officials told local media.
Siddiqui was convicted of trying to kill US military officers while in custody in Afghanistan. Thousands took to the streets in Pakistan to protest against her conviction in 2010.
After the Islamic State (IS) group kidnapped American journalist James Foley in Syria in 2012, they emailed his family demanding the release of Siddiqui.
A lawyer representing Siddiqui told CNN in a statement that the hostage-taker was not her brother, saying Siddiqui's family condemned his "heinous" actions.
Texas resident Victoria Francis, who was watching the live stream before it cut out, told the Associated Press that she heard the man rant against America and claim he had a bomb.
"He was pretty irritated and the more irritated he got, he'd make more threats," she said.
Latest Stories
-
Loud and Green : Plastic is not waste, it is an opportunity – PlasticPreneur challenges Ghana’s perception of plastic pollution
24 minutes -
Loud and Green : Young climate advocate calls for a shift from single-use plastics to tackle flooding
33 minutes -
Ocean Harmony Project founder warns plastic pollution is entering the human food chain through fish
42 minutes -
Ghana’s floods are behavioural disasters, not natural ones – Environmental advocates
55 minutes -
Nigeria clinches $10,000 grand prize as 4th ECOWAS Regional Cybersecurity Hackathon 2026 ends in Accra
3 hours -
AGI partners Danish industries to advance value chain sustainabilityÂ
3 hours -
Missing UCC student found dead as police launch investigations
3 hours -
Aflao border plunged into darkness, exposing travellers to attacks – Union Secretary
3 hours -
ECOWAS unites on minerals, industrialisation to power AfCFTA
3 hours -
Oti House of Chiefs to unveil 7-member committee on Nkwanta South conflict
3 hours -
Be advocates of modern parenting – Adaklu DCE
4 hours -
Ketu North MCE advocates agricultural mechanisation to boost productivity
4 hours -
The Thomas Partey Case: Presumption of innocence, sovereignty and the World Cup
4 hours -
Parents urged not to give away children due to poverty
4 hours -
Konongo crash leaves multiple injured
4 hours